Method for creating a print control profile for printing on a contoured axially symmetric object

ABSTRACT

A process is disclosed for creating a print profile to control the operation of a direct-to-shape printing system for applying images on the exterior of an axially symmetrical media object that has a contoured, varying exterior surface, such as occurs on curved wine bottles and sports equipment like bats. The process takes a media recipe holding media geometry information and an image intended to be printed and processes that information to control a motion control subsystem and a print engine subsystem. The geometry information is manipulated to generate a CAM table suitable for the motion control subsystem, and the image file is processed to create a raster image file suitable for ink head expression. Various setup values are included in the process to prepare the direct-to-shape printing system for use of the media recipe.

This application claims the benefit of filing priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 and 37 C.F.R. § 1.78 of the U.S. provisional Application Ser. No. 62/830,864 filed Apr. 8, 2019, for a Printing System for Applying Images Over a Contoured Axially Symmetric Object, and U.S. non-provisional application Ser. No. 16/526,731 filed Jul. 30, 2019 for a Method for Ink Pressure Modulation In A Printer For Axially Symmetric Objects. All information disclosed in those prior pending applications are hereby incorporated by reference.

COMPUTER PROGRAM LISTING

Applicant hereby incorporates by reference the computer program listing shown in an ASCII text file submitted herewith having the file name CREATE_CAM_TABLE.txt. The herewith submitted computer program listing should be considered an appendix to this specification and is referenced in the specification under Table 2.0.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to printing of images on articles of manufacture. In greater particularity, the present invention relates to printing images on the exterior of axially symmetrical articles of manufacture using inkjet printing technology. The invention also relates to direct printing on cylindrical objects while the objects are axially rotated, and to some degree “direct-to-shape” printing or DTS for 3-dimensional objects. Finally, the present invention relates to methods for creating a print control file to cause printing of an image over the surface of an axially symmetric object on a DTS printer.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Several techniques are utilized to print images on manufactured goods, such as drink and cosmetics containers. These containers are made of various materials, such as plastics, metals, and coated paper, and the traditional method for placing images on these containers, sometimes called “imaging” a container, is to print a label on a plastic or paper substrate and then affix the pre-printed label onto the container with adhesive. However, during the last 20 years many manufactures have transitioned from label printing to direct printing onto the container surface, sometime referred to as “direct-to-shape” (DTS) printing. However, while a label is a flexible medium and may be printed using traditional flexible sheet printing using methods going back over 100 years, direct printing on containers poses many challenges. One challenge is that while paper readily absorbs and retains inks and is a well understood medium for imaging, the containers themselves are made of materials that are difficult to image. Inks of special chemical blends and additives must be used, sometimes in the presence of active drying or hardening processes such as catalyst exposure or fast-curing using ultra-violet (UV) radiation. Further, container shapes are fixed, and an imaging process must take into account the irregular and varied shapes of the containers that are to be imaged. Such challenging print surfaces comprise a good-many products, such as drink cans and bottles, home care products, cups, coffee tumblers, personal care items, automotive parts, sports equipment, medical products, and electronics containers to name just a few. Hence, choosing the proper type of DTS printing equipment largely depends on the shape, size, number of colors, and type of substrate to be imaged, as well as the method that is preferred in which to transfer the image onto the substrate surface.

Various techniques have been developed to achieve DTS printing. One technique, “pad printing,” allows the transfer of a two-dimensional image onto a three-dimensional surface through the use of a silicone pad, an ink cup, and an etched plate. Pad printing is ideal for difficult substrates such as products found in the medical field and promotional printing, but due to the expense of the process pad printing typically uses only 1 or 2 colors during a print job.

Another technique, screen printing utilizes a mesh or screen to transfer the ink to the substrate surface. The process requires creating a screen that selectively permits ink to flow through the screen using a blocking stencil. While a photographic process may be used to create a screen, and hence allows relatively good resolution of imaging, the process requires substantial set-up time and is less flexible because any update or small alteration to the image to be laid down requires the creation of a new screen set. In addition, screen printing is typically restricted to only 1 or 2 colors because each color requires its own separate customized screen.

Inkjet DTS printing has over time risen to be a preferred method for DTS printing, especially for package printing. Inkjet printing utilizes a digital printhead to print full color customized designs in one or multiple imaging passes and may be applied directly to the substrate surface of the object or medium. Developed in the 1970s, inkjet printers were created to reproduce a digital image on a printing surface. The transfer occurs by propelling droplets of ink directly onto the substrate medium. The ink delivery mechanism is called the “printhead,” and is controlled by a digital image held by a connected computer system and which may be altered an infinite number of times. However, the design of printheads in an inkjet system varies greatly. Each head is uniquely designed for its application, and a variety of digital printers designs are available to be used to print on various substrates. Hence, various factors drive the types of inkjet printing system to be utilized for a printing project, such as the type of product substrate to be printed, the volume of products to be printed, and the required manufacturing speed for the imaging of any product traversing through the manufacturing line.

However, the benefits of inkjet printing in DTS applications have driven a recent preference to use inkjet systems in product manufacturing lines. For example, inkjet printing requires less set-up time and allows for faster print and cure times. Inkjet printing also is configurable to allow printing on multiple items at once, whereas other printing methods are often restricted to a single print instance for each object being printed. Moreover, print jobs do not require fixed setup time and costs, such as the generation of screens or the installation of plates.

On great advantage of inkjet printing is the ability to change graphic images quickly, sometimes almost in real-time, to adjust for printing results. Modern imaging software is template driven and allows for the importation of new or re-worked graphics instantly. Hence, the flexibility of image alteration on a job-by-job basis is a distinct advantage.

In addition, inkjet printers are robust enough to be used for short and long printing production projects, thereby meeting various manufacturing demands. For example, single machine may be used to prototype or provide a sample, low-volume job for a potential client, or that same machine may be used in the same facility to print thousands of articles in a day. Further, the same machine may use various types of inks to accommodate different object substrate materials.

Finally, conveyor and assembly line capability allow the inkjet printing process to become automated which can increase productivity and lower labor costs. So-called “inline” printers can do such printing at incredibly fast production rates. Typically, the inkjet printhead remains stationary while the substrate is moved past the printhead. This type of inkjet system is ideal for barcoding and dating product packaging. Single-pass multi-color inkjet printers are similar sometimes offering higher quality imaging with more color options at slightly slower print speeds.

One type of inkjet system is specialized to print on the surface of cylindrical containers and are called “digital cylindrical presses.” For example, The INX Group Ltd. (aka “Inx Digital” and “JetINX”) a division of Sakata INX offers a cylindrical printing solution under its CP100 and CP800 line of direct-to-shape (i.e. DTS) inkjet printing systems. These systems allow for the creation of an inkjet production line to print directly onto axially symmetrical objects. Other companies offer similar systems, such as Inkcups Now Corporation which offers the Helix line of DTS printers. These printers use a rotatable mandrel to hold an object and rotate the object next to an inkjet printhead as the printhead jets ink onto the surface of the cylindrical object. An image is captured for transfer onto an object and a printing “recipe” created, either by the printing machine itself or separately on personal computer and then imported into the printing machine. The “recipe” includes information necessary for the printing an image onto a media object and the recipe parameters are specific to each type of printer utilized.

The CP100 machine is a good example of an industry standard cylindrical DTS printing system. The system is a stand-alone machine that performs non-contact printing of images on generally cylindrical objects, particularly hollow cylindrical objects or hollow partially-cylindrical objects, for example, cans and bottles and including two-piece cans and bottles. Each cylindrical object is hand-loaded onto the machine and secured by vacuum on a mandrel to prevent slippage, which is part of a carriage assembly that functions to linearly positioning the object beneath at least one digitally controlled inkjet printhead. The object is rotated in front of the printhead while ink is deposited to the object to produce a desired printed design on the object. The ink is either partially or fully cured immediately after printing by exposing the ink to an energy-emitting means, such as a UV light emitter, positioned directly beneath the object. A carriage assembly is fixedly mounted to a linear slide actuator, which is in turn fixedly mounted to a mounting frame, whereby the carriage assembly is free to traverse along the linear slide actuator. The carriage linearly advances the object in a position adjacent to the inkjet printhead such that a first portion of the object may be printed if the object length is longer than the length of the printhead. The object is rotated while the computer-controlled printheads deposit ink from a supply of ink located above the object being printed upon. Simultaneously the UV light emitter either partially or completely cures the ink. The carriage then continues to advance the can further such that the entire length of the can is printed. As may be understood, the continuous advancement of the object by the printhead may not be necessary if the printhead is longer than the image desired to be printed on the object. The image itself comprises a digital image that is imported from a separate imaging application and loaded into application that creates a “recipe” of the image based on the physical specifications of the object to be printed upon. The profile is loaded through an operating system present on the machine and utilized to control motion of the object held by the carriage assembly along the linear slide. A print engine running on the machine controls the delivery of ink onto the object via the inkjet printhead as the object is moved past the printhead in a digitally controlled manner. The precise deposition of the ink via the inkjet heads onto the object, is dependent upon the object recipe which includes the specific amount and color of ink applied to the object as it traverses the printhead. The structure and operation of standard cylindrical DTS printing systems are fairly well understood in the printing industry and disclosed in representative U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,918,641B2 and 7,967,405B2.

However, the machines offered by Inx International only print onto a cylindrically flat exteriors and do not allow for the printing over curved exteriors of axially symmetric objects, such as exists on tapered drink tumblers or 3-dimensionally contoured bottle shapes.

The above-mentioned Helix line of cylindrical printers offered by Inkcups does allow for DTS printing of axially symmetrical, tapered drinkware, such as common stainless-steel drink tumblers. The Helix printer achieves this by tilting a mandrel holding the object to be printed and adjusting the angle of the object relative to a stationary printhead to approximate a straight line over a contoured surface of the object. The problem with the Helix approach is that such straight-line approximation does not ensure a constant density of ink to be applied to the object because the print head moves outside of an optimal jetting distance due to the fixed length of the print head. This non-optimal positioning of the object in relation to the printhead results in unacceptable color shifts in the printed image and various image issues due to increased ink drop drift and overspray. Since these types of cylindrical printers cannot provide constant articulation of the head or media throughout the print cycle to minimize the jetting distance, the Helix and similar printers are limited to printing on axis symmetrical shapes that are approximately cylindrical or conical where the gap between the printhead and printed surface can be maintained at a distance that does not exceed the capability of the printhead to provide acceptable dot placement and image quality. Hence, these types of printers are limited in the types media on which they may print because most contoured media objects will exceed the printhead capabilities of these printers (e.g. greater than 5 mm jetting distances), thereby not being able to produce a quality image.

Therefore, what is needed is a system to print over the surface of an axially symmetrical but contoured object, including a process for creating a print profile for controlling the printing in such a print system.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is the object of the present invention to provide a process for creating a print profile to control the operation of a direct-to-shape printing system for applying images on the exterior of an axially symmetrical media object that has a contoured, varying exterior surface, such as occurs on curved wine bottles and sports equipment like bats. The process takes a media recipe holding media geometry information and an image intended to be printed and processes that information to control a motion control subsystem and a print engine subsystem. The geometry information is manipulated to generate a CAM table suitable for the motion control subsystem, and the image file is processed to create a raster image file suitable for ink head expression. Various setup values are included in the process to prepare the direct-to-shape printing system for use of the media recipe.

Other features and objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from a reading of the following description as well as a study of the appended drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A printing system incorporating the features of the invention is depicted in the attached drawings which form a portion of the disclosure and wherein:

FIG. 1 is a front perspective view of the printing system showing the major elements of the machine;

FIG. 2A is a perspective view of the printing system having the exterior enclosure panels removed to show the internal operative components;

FIG. 2B is a magnified perspective view of the printing area of the printing system;

FIG. 3 is a front side elevational view of the printing system;

FIG. 4 is a magnified view of the front left portion of the printing system;

FIG. 5 is a detail view of the carriage mounting assembly of the printing system shown in FIG. 1 ;

FIG. 6 is a major subassembly perspective view of the printing area of the printing system;

FIGS. 7A-7B show front and back perspective views of the head manipulators for the printing system;

FIG. 8 is an enlarged perspective view of the top portion of the printing area for the printing system;

FIG. 9 is a rear elevational view of the left side of the printing system showing internal electrical components in an electrical bay;

FIG. 10 is a detail view of a bank of ink head assemblies positioned along a contoured surface of a media object being printed;

FIG. 11 is a diagram showing the print head movement relative to the media object movement while being imaged;

FIG. 12 is a top-level software control diagram showing the relationship between the machine operating system and control signals sent to electronic control systems;

FIG. 13 is a function diagram showing the flow of control signals between various elements of the motion control subsystem of the printing system;

FIGS. 14A-14B are an example CAM profile table based on a print job profile;

FIG. 15 is a data flow diagram showing the flow of information from a media object recipe to the printer;

FIG. 16 is a process flow diagram for generating print profile data for the motion control subsystem; and,

FIG. 17 is a process flow diagram for generating print profile data for image generation in the printer.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Referring to the drawings for a better understanding of the function and structure of the invention, FIG. 1 shows a front view of the machine 10 showing the primary external components of the invention. Machine 10 includes an external frame 11 and a series of adjustable rollers 12 supporting the machine components. Multiple panel doors 13 provide areas for storage of printer supplies, such as large volume ink reservoirs, and for cable conduit distribution for internal communications and power lines to power the machine 10. A pair of accordion doors 16 having viewing windows as shown to provide for the isolation of moving parts during the printing process for safety reasons, while allowing viewing of images being applied to various types of media within the interior printing area 17. Frame 11 also supports a top panel 21 having multiple fans with exterior grills for exhausting of heated air within the machine and any chemical fumes created during the imaging and curing process. A hood 19 supported by frame 11 and connected with top panel 21 extends to the right of the machine 10 over a media fixing area 18. An articulated support arm assembly 22 is connected to top panel 21 and allows for an operator to place a laptop or other compatible personal computing device on a platform landing area 23 of the arm to facilitate communication and control of the machine if needed. Landing area 23 can also hold a display device and keyboard for communicating with a Windows PC held behind panels 13 that controls printer 10.

System 10 incorporates several purchased subsystems that include integration modifications to make system 10 operative. For example, system 10 includes an ink delivery system manufactured by INX Group Ltd. (aka JetINX) that includes a system of pumps, electronic controls (i.e. a print engine), and a tubing system to transport inks of various colors from reservoirs inside a user accessible lower portion in the rear of the system 10 to a plurality of ink tanks and thereafter to a bank of inkjet print heads, as will be further described. The INX print engine includes its own human machine interface (HMI) that runs on a standard Windows based PC and that controls the operation of the print engine. Some variations of the INX HMI include the capability to vary ink pressures delivered to each inkjet head by sending messages to the INX HMI through a dynamic linked library (.DLL) file loaded onto the PC. In the preferred embodiment of the herein described printing system 10, a second HMI (referred to herein as the “LSINC HMI”) overlays the INX HMI to extend the interface capabilities of the INX HMI such that the herein described system may utilize the INX supplied sub-systems. In particular, the LSINC HMI responsive to a supplied media object geometry file converts those media geometries into a form usable by a motion control subsystem and using those geometries transfers ink pressure changes to the INX HMI to adjust for inkjet print head movements, as will be further discussed. Further, as is known in the industry, inks are selected specifically to bond with and adhere to the surface of various types of media object surfaces in order to accommodate the graphical color requirements of each graphic design used in a print job. The complexities of selecting inks and color coordination to achieve a particular graphic design goal, and the elements for and the operation of the purchased INX ink delivery system will be omitted in as much as such information is understood in the industry and not necessary for a complete understanding of the herein described invention.

FIGS. 2A-2B and FIG. 3 show the machine internal components including an exhaust fan 24 supported by frame 11 and protruding through panel 21, a printing assembly area 25 within printing area 17 supported by internal frame components 11 and positioned above and surrounding a space into which media is positioned for imaging. To the left of the printing assembly area 25 is positioned a collection of peristaltic pumps in a single assembly 27 supported above an electronics bay 28 holding various electronics and printed circuit boards (PCBs) for controlling the machine and printing process. The left side 26 of machine 10 houses the pumps and electronics bay and is accessible from both the front and back of machine 10. Exhaust fan 24 removes waste heat from area 26 to keep a constant flow of cooler air flowing across individual components.

FIGS. 2B-3 show the individual component assemblies in interior printing area 17 from FIG. 1 . Printing assembly area 25 includes banks of ink head assemblies 29 supported above printing area 17, and a linear grouping of ink curing lamps 32 are positioned along a lower portion of printing area 17 for curing of inked images. Positioned above assemblies 29 are multiple ink supply tanks 31 feeding each ink head assembly via tubing (not shown). Adjacent to each tank is a control board 34 for controlling the operation of each printing head manipulator assembly in the bank 29.

From the front side of bay 26 may be more clearly seen per FIG. 4 the series of peristaltic pumps 38 above several PCBs. Electronics bay 28 includes an encoder I/O board 41, a vacuum control board 42 for controlling the pressure of ink flowing from each pump 38 to ink head assemblies 29, and a USB controller board 43 adjacent to two consolidated I/O boards 44.

Referring now to FIGS. 5 and 6 it may be seen an arrangement of elements that causes a printable media object 51 to be secured and moved into the imaging area 17 from media loading area 18 responsive to electronic control elements held in bay 26. Initially a piece of media, such as an object having an axially symmetrical surface area, is clamped at its ends between two clamping fixtures 52 a,b with the help of a media support member 56. Clamping fixtures 52 a,b form a rotatable mandrel holding object 51 rotatable via internal bearings at each end which allow media 51 to freely rotate about its longitudinal central axis via rotary servo 53 causing axial rotation responsive to inputs received from electronics held in bay 26. In this arrangement, object 51 along with clamps 52 a,b effectively becomes a spindle the surface of which becomes a printable surface during rotation. A carriage 57 supports the servo motor, media, and the spindle arrangement which is slidable back and forth 69 from the media loading area 18 into printing area 17 responsive to control inputs from a pair of control knobs 58. Critically, as carriage 57 travels inward under assemblies 29, its axial orientation remains fixed so that a target distance between the surface of object 51 and each ink print head is maintained during rotation, which comports with the surface features of object 51 which has an axially symmetric shape. An adjustable tailstock member 59 assists to keep object 51 positioned statically with respect to the object's longitudinal axis by providing an adjustable means to maintain object 51 locked within a single rotating axis while clamped in the slidable spindle arrangement.

Once locked with clamping fixtures 52 a,b, carriage 57 is moved into interior printing area 17 and underneath print head assemblies 29. Carriage 57 is further adapted to be slidable in a precise and controlled manner along the object's longitudinal axis along path 68 once repositioned in printing area 17. Printer head banks 29 are held fixed in relation to object 51 with a head manipulator mount 65 supported by upper and lower frame rails 11 a,b. Mount 65 includes a pair of end members 66 a,b slidable supported by railing 11 b. A head manipulator alignment adjuster 67 permits fine adjustment of mount 65 by rotating screws 67 a,b. The combination of the carriage 57 and supporting rails and brackets described allows for a relatively precise starting position for calibration of the print assemblies 29 relative to objects 51 placed within printing area 17 prior to controlled movement of the individual print head assemblies as will be described.

Below object 51 positioned in movement path 68 are positioned an ink curing assembly 60 holding a serial bank of curing lamps 63 located below object 51 so that light emitted by lamps 63 blanket the surface of object 51 during rotation with ultraviolet radiation (UV). This causes inks being applied via print head assemblies 29 to cure during a fraction of a rotation of object 51. Assembly 60 includes a plurality of curing lamp assemblies 62 each holding a stepper motor 64 that allows for fine adjustment of curing lamp height relative to object 51 as it moves along path 68 during rotation. As shown, bracket 61 a supports lamp assemblies 62 which is slidably supported by two pairs of frame rails 61 b,c.

Referring now to FIGS. 7A-7B it may be seen the arrangement of elements in each print head manipulator assemblies 71 held by ink head assembly bank 29. Each head manipulator 71 is supported by mount 65 in slidable relation via horizontal rails 84 a,b. A pair of stepper motors 82 are held by back plate 78 at the upper most part of plate 78 and oriented so that their output shafts 81 extend downward along the outer surface of plate 78. Shafts 81 are rigidly bolted to the tops of columns 76 supported by a pair of vertical rails 79 slidably bolted to the outer surface of plate 78 via fixtures 75. At the bottom of columns 76 a print head support platform 73 is held by a pair of freely rotating screws 77 that act as pivot points to allow the independent movement of columns 76 up and down relative to one another responsive to actions of stepper motors 82. This allows for independent pivoting movement 74 of platform 73. Each platform 73 holds a print head 72 from which ink may be deposited on the surface of object 51 just below platform 73, and due to the pivoting movement of platform 73 print head 72 is also caused to pivot about surface of object 51 responsive to actions of stepper motors 82.

Importantly, entire backplate 78 is movable horizontally along path 86 due to it being slidably supported by horizontal rails 84 a,b. A stepper actuator 83 is attached to and supported by head manipulator mount 65 and connected via a shaft 87 to side bracket 85 which is fixed to one side of the rear surface of back plate 78. Since horizontal rails 84 a,b slidably support backplate 78 to mount 65 (see FIG. 6 ), movement of shaft 87 by actuator 83 allows for precise horizontal movement of head manipulator 71 along path 86 responsive to electronic impulses issued by electronics held by bay 26 and driver control boards 34.

Referring to FIGS. 8-9 , above ink head assemblies 29 is positioned 6 dual well ink reservoirs or tanks 31 holding various ink colors as required for each imaging job and connected via tubes (not shown) to each ink print head 72 through fittings 88. A series of driver boards 34 are positioned adjacent to tanks 31 and together with carriage control boards 91 control movement of media object 51 and print heads 72 during printing. A suitable driver board for drivers 34 is the A-CSD series of stepper motor drives (Part No. CSD ET 94) offered by R.T.A. Motion Control Systems located in MARCIGNAGO (PV), Italy.

From the rear side of machine 10 driver boards 34 and carriage control boards 91 are positioned to the left of electronics bay 26. Bay 26 includes additional PCBs to control movement during printing such as, a rotary servo drive board 92 to control rotary servo 53, a linear axis servo drive board 93 to control horizontal movement of head assemblies 71 and an EtherCAT controller board 94 to control communications between each driver board from a machine operating system. A power supply rack 96 provides power to the electronics for machine 10 and is positioned to allow for air below the machine to be passed over components 96 and out of exhaust port 24 in top panel 21.

Referring now to FIGS. 10 and 11 , it may be seen the manner and movement 100 of ink heads 72 to conform to the surface of media object 51 as it rotates 108 within printing area 17. As shown media object 51 includes an axially symmetric surface area that varies by radius R_(i) 119 from central axis 107 of object 51, thereby creating a print path 122 having a print length of L 117 along the curve which is parallel to target media surface 121, but spaced away from surface 121 by a small amount representing the space or “offset” 126 between an ink print head 72 lower surface 105 and object surface 121. This distance is small, typically 0.80 mm to 1.0 mm, and is the distance that ink droplets must traverse prior to landing on object surface 121 to create an image. A contoured media object having an axially symmetrical surface will present a contoured surface portion 102 to the extent that R_(i) 119 varies from axis 107, thereby creating a fixed local slope M_(i) 116 along lower surface 105 for the width 123 of each print head that varies as each print head 72 traverses along media surface 121 in print head path 122. As print head bank 29 adjusts to the surface 121 of media 51 within a contour 102, a plurality of ink heads, for example 103, 104, and 106, alter their angle by pivoting around pivot path 74 (see FIG. 7A) to match the slope M_(i) at each R_(i) along surface 121 so that offset 126 is minimized. During rotation 108 of object 51, for each R_(i) along surface 121 ink head lower surface 105 is positioned a corresponding distance Z_(i) from axis 107.

Any image to be printed is rotated into a portrait orientation with a y-axis value assigned to its height and an x-axis value assigned to its width. These x and y values become the dimensions X and Y, where Y is along the height and X wraps around the media. As may be understood, for each Y_(i) there is a corresponding radius R_(i). Depending upon the length of any image to be printed and the length of media surface 121 upon which the image is to be applied, print path 122 has a fixed length L 117 that object 51 must be moved using carriage 57 along path 68 (see FIG. 6 ) and having a precise location Y_(i) 114 along axis 107. A series of equations is shown below that prescribes the slope or angle into which each print head 72 must move in order to suitably conform to a predetermined print path 122 at each Y_(i) position 114 with its corresponding radius R_(i). Such a print path may also be referred to as a “motion path.”

Given the following variables, a motion path may be calculated: Vl _(i) =V _(cathage) +dVl _(i) dVl _(i)=path length mm/1 mm horizontal travel*V _(carriage) mm/s dVl _(i)=(√{square root over ((R _(i+1) −R _(i))²+(Y _(i+1) −Y _(i))²)}−(Y _(i+1) −Y _(i)))×Vcarriage

A localized slope may be calculated:

$M_{i} = {\frac{dRi}{dYi} = \frac{{R\left( {i + 1} \right)} - {Ri}}{{Y\left( {1 + 1} \right)} - {Yi}}}$

The position of the printhead midpoint is defined as: Zl _(i) =R _(i)+(Offset)cos(arctan(M _(i)))

Approximation of print path length difference from Y_(total): l _(i)=Σ_(i=0) ^(n) dl _(i)=Σ_(i=0) ^(n)(√{square root over ((R _(i+1) −R _(i))²+(Y _(i+1) Y _(i))²)}−(Y _(i+1) −Y _(i)))

The relative position “Y” of print head to carriage position is: U _(i) =i _(i)+(Offset)sin(arctan(M _(i))

This control strategy holds to within 10% accuracy for contour angles up to 25 degrees, but steeper angles require smaller steps, or a three-point path length approximation that assesses the impact of Y_(i−1), Y_(i), Y_(i+1) on arc thru R_(i−1), R_(i) & R_(i+1). It will be noted that based on the ratio of the print surface slope to the head slope, image quality degradation can be predicted and a determination made as to whether printed image quality will be acceptable for an object's particular contour characteristics.

In addition, image quality can be improved by reducing the local print head width through the reduction of nozzles used in each print head. For example, to maintain image quality, an imaging objective is to limit ink jet drop-on-drop misalignment to less than ¼ of a drop. The drop size and resolution are chosen such that they blend together between image lines creating full coverage. On contoured surfaces the width of the print head (width 123) represents a chord length along contour profile 102. Approximating the contour as a series of tangent continuous arcs, one can compare the chord length printed on the surface to the length of the contour profile 102 represented by the following formula: s=r*theta

where s=the length of the arc, r=the radius of the arc, and theta represents the swept angle of the arc. The objective is to maintain the difference between arc length s and the print head's print width, (W), to be less than ¼ of the image line spacing, which approximates to: 1/(image resolution along arc×4) Where, s−W<0.25/(image resolution along arc)

For a given Wand resolution, s−W may be calculated to be: 2r(arcsin)(W/2r)−W.

As may be seen, by reducing the printed ink width W expressed from a print head results in a decrease in the radius of curvature that may be printed with acceptable image quality. This results in the ability to print over a contoured object with a higher degree of slope (i.e. a tighter curve) without degrading image quality. Hence, using these values the print head width may be varied to adjust the image quality to accommodate differing contour properties for various media objects.

Independent of image quality in relation to ink head width, because object 51 is moved at a constant horizontal velocity “V” 127 ink heads 72 must independently move in a horizontal direction independently from carriage 57 motion because each print head along any contour area 102 will encounter a different local slope M_(i) for its print path at any particular moment along that path. This is accomplished by activating stepper 83 (see FIG. 7B) to move shaft 87 in a bilateral horizontal direction 86 to maintain a constant relative velocity of each print head manipulator 71 along axis 107 as carriage 57 moves along path 68. This movement of ink heads independent of carriage movement holding media object 51 is important to allow for a consistent printed image along contour 102 without distortion.

Because contour 102 presents an increased or decreased R_(i) depending upon the surface shape of media 51, an image having a fixed width X and height Y uses a predetermined amount of ink for a particular image for an area X×Y, as will be understood. Because R_(i) varies, in order for an image to be placed on a contoured object surface the amount of ink must also be varied in order to avoid over inking the surface for any R_(i) that is less than the maximum R_(i) on the object surface. Hence, a gradient mask must be generated as part of a profile for any imaging job in order to proportionately reduce the amount of ink in response to the degree of contour present on the object 51. This is accomplished by utilizing a third-party illustration software application, such as for example Adobe Illustrator, to create a separate drawing layer for the image artwork to be applied to the media object 51. The separate layer (e.g. called a “knockout” layer) is created as the top most layer using a “process white” that will not actually cause ink to be jetted. It reduces the opacity of all lower levels by its presence. The target reduction is created by applying a gradient opacity to this layer. The gradient starts at 1% of ink removal at the largest diameter and increases per the following equation at each position in the artwork with a corresponding R_(i) diameter: Knockout percentage at a given position=(1−(media diameter at position)/(max media diameter))×100% These values are saved in the image file that is processed through a raster image processor or “RIP” to create a printer specific file for transfer to the PC controlling the print job prior to execution of the print, as will be further discussed job.

Precise control of motion of several elements in machine 10 allow for the precise application of ink onto the surface of object 51. This is achieved by driver boards sending signals to several actuators in a coordinated manner. The signals sent by those driver boards are controlled by a CAM table, such as a CAM profile function, defined by a set of X and Y coordinates. Those X and Y coordinates are derived from the equations shown above and are unique for each print job. An example CAM table disclosing suitable example variable values is shown in FIGS. 14A-14B, as will be further discussed.

All control signals from driver boards to control motion in machine 10 are initiated from a Windows based O/S software control system run by a PC housed underneath printing area 17, with display screen connected to the Windows OS held by platform 23. Print initiation occurs from signals sent by the PC to motion controller 191 which then controls a series of motion means as part of a motion control subsystem 170 (see FIG. 13 ) via an EtherCAT communications system 179. Alternatively, they could be supplied by a non-Windows operating system with the proper configuration.

Referring to FIG. 12 , a software control system 140 includes Windows OS 141 running on PC 142 having suitable storage 148, display output and user control elements 151, and output communications means as is commonly available in modern PCs. Computer storage 148 holds configuration files and library files 143 (e.g. DLL files) to enable system 140 to utilize loaded files from a print job profile generation process 146 that provides input into system 140 to operate printer system 10 for a print job. Process 146 includes the generating of an image/graphic file for printing onto media 51, and the generation of a geometry file that includes geometric information corresponding to the surface configuration of the media object onto which the image will be applied in the system 10. The image file includes color and ink level reduction values referred to herein as a “gradient mask” for reducing the amount of ink released responsive to surface contour values, as discussed above. The print job profile is held in PC storage 148 as a set of files 143 loaded onto PC and utilized by HMI applications loaded in memory 150. A keyboard and display 151 allow for the generation of a human machine interface (HMI) for an operator 152 to initiate and monitor a print job and for the loading of media onto the machine through loading area 18. As mentioned above, the LSINC HMI overlays the INX HMI and replicates and extends the capabilities of the INX HMI and the LSINC HMI is the interface that a human operator 152 utilizes.

As previously indicated, each print job comprises a specific “recipe” for each media object to be printed that includes the geometry of the surface of the object and an image to be applied to the exterior surface of the object. The herein described recipe is specific for system 10 and holds information not usable by prior printing systems. In practice, a graphic artist would create or obtain an image in a raster file format (i.e. a bitmap image), such as a jpeg, tiff, or png (portable network graphics) formats that they desire to be printed on the media object 51. That image is then converted into a vector-based image through the use of an illustration software application, such as for example Adobe Illustrator. The above-mentioned “gradient mask” is created using this illustration application as well as creating a vector output file, such as an Adobe Postscript file, that may be utilized by a raster image processor (“RIP”) for actually printing the final image. The output from Adobe Illustrator may also produce a vector-based pdf (portable document format) file which is an acceptable format for a RIP to utilize. As is known, a raster image processor produces a raster image for output to printing hardware, such as inkjet printing hardware, that produces the image on print media. A RIP is preferred to control the printing hardware because a high-level page description language, such as in a pdf file format, may be utilized where specific image control may be obtained over the final printed image, such as printing resolutions, ink limits, and color calibrations. One acceptable RIP software application is ONYX RIP available from Onyx Graphics, Inc. located in Salt Lake City, Utah. The print file created by ONYX RIP is an .isi file type that separates color planes. This .isi file is supplied directly to the INX supplied print engine 149 for printing.

Print engine subsystem 149 is comprised of a software and hardware component. The software component, principally characterized by the INX HMI, resides on the PC and breaks up the received .isi file into print swaths which are transferred via a USB connection to the head drive controller 191 (see FIG. 13 ). The head drive controller 191 then communicates the color data to the respective head drives to cause the print heads to print at an appropriate position and timing to print an image on the media. The timing of the firing and motion is synchronized through an encoder signal 172 (see FIG. 13 ) with the firing slaved to the encoder signal generated by motion control subsystem 170 (see FIG. 13 ). Further discussions regarding the timing, color control, and printing head actuation of print heads 72 in system 10 shall be omitted in as much as such printing methodologies are standard, purchasable items and well understood for digital printing in the printing industry and not necessary for a complete understanding of the herein described invention.

In addition to the .isi print file, a set of geometry values representative of the media object 51 are loaded onto the print system PC 142 and saved on PC storage system 148 as part of two files 143 necessary for each print job for each type of media object 51 to be printed upon. That geometry file is a simple comma separated variable listing representative of measurements of the media object 51, such as a radius value from the asymmetrical radial axis to the surface of the media along its length, the overall length of the media, the maximum width of the media, etc. The geometries may be generated in various known ways, such as for example a human operator taking physical measurements of the media, a scanning program scanning the media and generating geometries of the media, or a CAD program generating those geometric values (discussed below). The LSINC HMI reads the media geometry file stored as a .lsg file and creates a CAM table (see FIGS. 14A-14B) for controlling the movement of the inkjet printing heads and for calculating ink pressure adjustment values. That CAM table is translated and sent to a motion controller as a .lcn file over a USB connection. The media geometries file utilized by the LSINC HMI allows it to send commands to the INX HMI through the DLL file during printing to vary ink pressures to compensate for inkjet head movements during printing. Hence, as may be understood, the combination of the image file holding the graduated masking layer and a geometry file constitute a unique recipe for the printing of an image onto the surface of the media object 51. That recipe information is held by the PC 143 in its storage 148 and the combination of the LSINC HMI and the INX HMI utilize that recipe to execute each print job.

Print engine 149 includes an ink delivery system 144 that controls monitoring of ink levels in various containers in machine 10, pressure within ink tubes for consistent delivery of ink from tank to tank, and pressure delivered to the individual print heads. Engine 149 controls the drivers 153 for each print head and appropriate print head nozzle firing responsive to the requirements of each print job. Engine 149 also controls the generation of color ink signals to each print head to express each image color at the appropriate position on the media object surface as it rotates and moves laterally past the print heads.

System engine 145 provides top level system control of motion subsystem 170 (see FIG. 13 ) which controls the motion of the media held by its carriage, and all elements for printing and curing an image printed onto the surface of media 51 loaded into machine 10. The PC 142 controls the LSINC HMI communicating the status and available commands to human operator 152, runs the software portion of the print engine, and displays the HMI via display and keyboard arrangement 151 for interaction and for command inputs, and other data, to be sent to the hardware portion of the print engine 149.

Referring now to FIG. 13 , it may be seen a function diagram showing the flow of control signals between various elements of the motion control subsystem 170 of the printing system 10. Subsystem 170 includes a collection of encoders functionally connected to a collection of movement means (e.g. 188, 186, 182, and 197), sensors (e.g. 177, 199), and controllers or “drives” (e.g. 187). The elements shown in FIG. 13 are functionally depicted, but are also generally shown for illustration purposes in their spatial position relative to one another. As is known, each drive may be implemented as a separate PCB and include its own development tool kit that enables controller code to be created and stored in non-volatile memory of each drive board during system operation. The use of an EtherCAT compatible drive presents motor and drive as a servo axis that can be managed via standard EtherCAT protocol. Movement means consist of either DC stepper motors or synchronous servo motors, and are driven by dedicated driver boards controlled by controller 191. Communication between each driver board and controller 191 is accomplished via a plurality of communication cables 174 using standard EtherCAT protocol connected via EtherCAT PCB 179 that allows for an update time of at least 2 ms between elements. In the preferred embodiment, 46 axes are maintained simultaneously in the system 170, with a 2 ms response time which is sufficient to achieve an operative system using this number of axes.

Each movement means includes an encoder to ensure continuous feedback as to axis position in the system 170, and to ensure movement compliance within a bounded position set. Each electronic movement subsystem uses sensors and encoders to provide closed-loop feedback as to the position of any axis relative to media object 51.

As shown, print head manipulators 71 includes a series of electronic movement control subsystems 180 having a Z-axis drive, Z-axis offset drive, and an X-axis drive 187, each with their own set of home sensors and limit switch sensors 177, and a linear actuator with encoder 188. Each subsystem 180 is required for each manipulator 71, which in combination together make up a bank of manipulators 29 (see FIG. 2B). In the preferred embodiment, system 170 includes 12 of subsystems 180, one for each print head 72, but print system 10 may work with more or less than 12 print heads depending upon the number of colors required for each print job and the time in which each print job must be completed for manufacturing goals. For example, an increase in print heads would increase the machine's capacity for high volume manufacturing. Hence, system 170 is scalable for a particular machine to meet a particular printing application requirement.

An X-axis movement for object 51 is accomplished with subsystem 189 having a drive unit 181, a linear motor 182 and encoder 183, and home sensor 177 and limit switch 178. An optical encoder 194 (not shown) is positioned adjacent to tail stock spindle 59 to provide position information on media 51 position along path 68 to provide a closed position feedback loop with X-axis drive 181. An entry sensor 192 and light curtain sensor array 198 provide additional feedback to controller 191 for operator and machine safety. Subsystem 189 is connected to controller 191 via EtherCAT communications line 174. Rotary movement of media 51 occurs via rotary axis subsystem 184 having a drive unit 185 on a PCB, a motor 186 and position sensors 192. X-axis subsystem 189 is configured so that linear motor 182 is a slave relative to rotary axis subsystem 184, rotary motor 186, and all print head subsystems 180 are slaves relative to linear motor 182. This slave arrangement facilitates the use of a CAM table (see FIGS. 14A-14B) to control the relative positions of the elements shown in subsystem 170 and allows for a continuously varying ratio of movement elements to achieve satisfactory print head movement to follow object contour surface 121 through sloped areas 102. Prior systems utilize direct gearing arrangements and cannot vary movement of elements in continuously varying ratios, and therefore cannot follow contoured paths even if they were arranged to be capable of physically moving in a 3-dimensional manner to follow those contoured paths at different resolutions.

Each curing lamp assembly 62 in bank 60 (see FIG. 6 ) includes an electronic subsystem 190 similar to print head subsystems 180. Each subsystem 190 includes a drive unit 196, an actuator 197 with encoder, and four sensors (home, limit, front, and rear) 199. Lamp subsystems 190 are connected to controller via EtherCAT cable 174 as shown. Bank 60 preferably includes 7 subsystems 190, one for each UV lamp, but as with the print heads are scalably arranged to accommodate less or more lamps than 7, depending upon the machine operational requirements.

Through cable 174 and EtherCAT control board 179, motion controller 191 commands the individual drives through the EtherCAT protocol to control each movement means, thereby providing coordinated movement of all elements in subsystem 170. For system level movement coordination, an encoder PCB 193 ties timing signals between print engine 149, ink delivery system 144, and motion control subsystem 170 via cable 172. An optical encoder 194 residing on the rotary axis 185 provides timing fire pulses to encoder PCB 193 which distributes the same signal to the motion control system 170 via cable 174. Rotary axis PCB 192 conditions the signal and simultaneously passes it to the head drive controllers of print engine 149. This allows for the system 10 to communicate the X position of media 51 as it travels along path 68 within print area 17.

Satisfactory off-the-shelf components for sub-system 170 shown in FIG. 13 are listed in Table 1.0 below:

TABLE 1.0 FIG. 13 Element No. Element Name Mfg./Part No. Description 182 X-axis Linear Motor Parker Automation/406T14LXRMP Linear Motor 181 X-axis Linear Drive Kollmorgen/AKD-P00: 306-NBEC- Drive Unit 0000 183 X-axis Linear Encoder Integrated with Linear Motor Integrated Encoder with home and limit switch in motor 186 Rotary Axis Motor Kollmorgen/PN: AKM23D-EFGNC- Motor OO 185 Rotary Axis Drive Kollmorgen/PN: AKD-P00306- Drive Unit NBEC-OOOO 192 Rotary Axis Encoder Renishaw/PN: TI0100A-40E 191 Motion Controller Trio Motion Technology LLC/PN: Quad Core uP w/support PB62 & P914 up to 64 Remote Axes P862 + PB78 + 5x P914 187 and Linear Actuator (head & Thomson/PN: MLUA051S with 4k ppr differential 197 lamp manipulators) 1B-0100-03000SFSS-001 encoder (use “FAS for x- axis, w/anti-backlash nut, 1.3 inch lead, no encoder) 188 and Linear Actuator Drive RTA/PN: CST ET Model 94 Drive Unit 196 (head and lamp manipulators) 177 Limit sensor for home Panasonic/PM-25/45/65 series u- Photo-electric sensor position & end of shaped micro photoelectric sensor travel position(head & lamp manipulators) 177 Head and Lamp Crash Panasonic/Ex-11B Sensor Sensors (front and rear)(head and lamp manipulators)  63 Curing Lamps Phoseon/Fire Edge FE400 Enhanced body style 120 × 10AC 385 nm w/rod with air filters & glass lens PN: 33607 protector 198 Safety Light Curtain 14 mm resolution, finger Dual Zone: operator Sensor protection; <50 ms response time station location and print area termination

As indicated above system 10 relies upon an installed ink supply subsystem purchased from Inx International, referred to herein as an “ink delivery system.” However, in order for system 10 to print images with consistent ink quality onto media surface 121, delivery of ink through print heads 72 requires modulation of the ink delivery system in order to compensate for motion of print heads 72. In an industry standard print system, ink delivery system 144 provides a static vacuum to a series of ink supply lines from ink reservoirs (not shown) held in cabinets behind panels 13 to a plurality of ink containers 31 positioned proximate to and above ink head assemblies 29. Electronics held in bay 26 control vacuum system assembly 27 to deliver ink from the ink reservoirs to tanks 31, and also to print heads 72 via a system of tubes (not shown). Each tank also has its own pressure line via one of the manifold fittings 88 that forces ink from tank 31 to the print head 72. While standard ink delivery systems use static pressure to delivery ink to print heads, the disclosed system 10 modulates the delivery of ink to each print heads from each tank 31 to compensate for the change in gravitational forces applied against each print head 72 as each head is accelerated and decelerated to conform to surface contour 102. That modulation is achieved by sending pressure value alteration signals to ink delivery system 144 generated by the INX HMI running on the PC via a USB connection. The INX HMI is in turn responsive to the LSINC HMI sending pressure offset values via DLL commands to the INX HMI, which are responsive to derivative values from print head movements 74, 76, and 86 (see FIGS. 7A-7B). Those derivative values are known ahead of time and predetermined during the calculations to create the CAM table 200 (see FIGS. 14A-14B). For example, as print head 72 moves down, ink vacuum pressure must increase to compensate for the increased static head pressure due to gravity forces on the ink delivery system and vice versa as the head moves upwards. The motion control system maintains the relative position of the heads from a home position. The optimal pressure settings in mBar are determined at the home position via calibration testing that ensures the heads do not weep ink. Based on the density of each respective ink used, a revised pressure value is calculated in mBar based on its distance from home in millimeters and the ink's specific gravity. The pressure value is calculated using the following formula: Pressure at position=Pressure at home+(distance traveled from home in millimeters)×(specific gravity of the ink/relationship between mmH20 and mBar of 10.197mBar/mm) This information is communicated via a USB bus connected to the ink delivery system 144 (e.g. the JetINX's ink delivery system) every 25 ms or less if the values change. If the values do not change then no refresh signal is required.

Referring to FIGS. 14A-14B, it may be seen a CAM table example 200 based on a print job profile 143. CAM table 200 is truncated 224 since the full extent of values is unnecessary for a full understanding of the figure. CAM table 200 includes a series of columnated values 201 that control movements of various servos and actuators shown in motion subsystem 170 and which were calculated based on the formulas used to describe the movement mechanics of FIG. 11 . Each row of numbers represents a discrete position and movement condition for all movement means described for motion control subsystem 170 described in FIG. 13 along print path 122. Column A 202 holds values representative of the geometry of the media object 51 as recorded in a CAD program that was used to model the object, and holds the distance from axis 107 for any modeled object in millimeters and is equivalent to R_(i). Information for Column A may be obtained in various known ways, such as manual measurements taken along the object surface to calculate its diameter along its surface from which R_(i) may be derived. The object may be scanned and seed values in the CAD program used to calculate the values. Or, the CAD program itself may calculate the values and output a tabulated list of values based on entered user parameters for the CAD software program. The resolution for the values of A are at most ±0.001 mm. Column B 203 holds slope values calculated for the slope along each point recorded from Column A and are readily provided by most CAD programs. Column C includes the rate of change for each slope value from the prior entered slope value. Columns D-G include values pertaining to Z_(i) such as D 206 offset print head curve values 122, E 208 velocity of the print head in millimeters per second at the corresponding point in Column A, F 211 required print head tilt position 74 (see FIG. 7A) in millimeters, and the corresponding required tilt velocity G 212 millimeters per second. Values held in columns H-J pertain to compensation movements of each manipulator assembly 71 (see FIGS. 7A-7B) such as H 214 the required horizontal shift at each point along the print path in millimeters, the cumulative derivative shift along the curve in the print path I 216, and the a D_(x) correction offset value in millimeters J 217. The Dx correction offset maintains a constant velocity relative to the target print surface. Column K 219 holds the lamp path value in millimeters along which the path UV lamps traverses relative to axis 107.

CAM table 200 is held in PC storage 148 and motion controller 191 retrieves the values and stores them in its non-volatile memory upon the operator 152 initiating the printing process through the HMI. The print head positions are slaved to the motion of the linear motor 182 (see FIG. 13 ). The position of each stepper axis is represented as a CAM table driven by the position of the linear motor 182. As may be understood, row values from 1-n 222 comprise the complete movement values required to complete any print job.

In operation, an operator will use a third-party software CAD program to describe and produce table 200, while exporting the graphic file for the design to be printed into a format acceptable for printer ripping. The ripping tool will then generate a printer specific file representing the image to be printed and a gradient mask calculated based on the media object geometries and recorded in a geometry file. The printer specific file (.isi) and geometry files (.lsg) for the media object to be printed are then transferred via a thumb drive or other common transference method to Windows PC 142 along with all necessary support files as required by print engine 149. The object to be printed (i.e. the media object 51) is loaded by the operator 157 onto spindle 52 a,b with axis 107 of the object properly aligned with the rotational axis of spindle 52 a,b. Using the HMI on the Windows PC display 151, the operator 152 then moves carriage 57 holding the spindle 52 a,b and object 51 into the loading area 18. Inks suitable for the object surface print job are preloaded in machine 10 and ready for use as is known. The print job is then initiated and the object 51 spun at a predetermined rotation rate and ink applied onto the object surface at the correct rotational location along print path 122. Carriage 57 holding the object 51 moves along distance Y_(0-i) 114 at a constant velocity 127 as ink is expressed against surface 121 from each print head 72. Responsive to motion control signals issued by controller 191, and as synchronized with print engine 149 via encoder PCB 193, each print head assembly 71 moves print head 72 into position in a spaced and parallel relation to the surface 121 of the object as object 51 is moved along path 122, applying ink at the precise location along the object surface. As is understood, each print head color is overlapped in a coordinated fashion at the same location on the object's surface so that predetermined colors are achieved on the objects surface to create the preloaded image. Individual UV lamps 63 held in curing lamp bank 60 are moved up and down to conform in a spaced relation to object surface 121 underneath rotating object 51 as it progresses along path 122, thereby curing ink applied to the surface of object 51. Once the object has been printed and end of print distance 114 reached, the object is returned to the home position and withdrawn by operator 152 from the loading area 18. The process may then be repeated for further objects to be printed, except that the print job profile generation and file loading steps may be omitted if the object to be printed is the same as the previous object and the image is the same.

Referring to FIG. 15 it may be seen a recipe 241 having an object recipe 242 and a setup control 243. The object receipt 242 includes media geometry 246 and an image for printing 247, such as a graphical image. The setup control 243 includes a set of setup values 248 for use by the printer 10.

Media geometry information 246 is processed 250 and sent to the motion control system 170 to control the various subassemblies of printer 10, and image information 247 is processed 270 and transferred to print engine 149 for generating ink at the proper location on the media object 51. Setup values 248 are also sent 249 to both the motion control system 170 and the print engine 149 responsive to environmental constraints of the ink, the printer configuration, and media object properties.

Referring to FIG. 16 , it may be seen a process A 250 to convert an axially symmetric media object 51 into coordinated movement of various printer subassemblies. Initially 251, a media object 51 geometry must be quantized so that a continuous series of radius values R_(i) 119 from longitudinal axis 107 taken along the object's length Y_(i) 114 and recorded. This may be accomplished in several ways: (1) an object diameter may be manually measured along it length and entered into a spread sheet; or preferably (2) by photo or scanning of the object and extracting shape data from that action. In the later, three ways may be used: (a) optically scanning the object in three dimensions; (b) taking a photographic of the object at distance to reduce parallax to produce a photographic image of the object; or (c) making an ultrasonic scan of the object while held within the printer just prior to printing. Once scanned or photographed, that object representation may then be imported into a computer aided design package (CAD) such as AutoCAD by either importing directly the scanned object data or importing the object image, and dimensional values assigned to the object if not automatically provided as part of that importation process. In either case, once the image is in a CAD program a curve or outline of the object on one or both sides of the longitudinal axis may be created. For example, the outline of the object may be traced in the CAD program and a smoothing tool used to create a smooth curve that accurately represents the media object surface 121.

Once a smoothed curve is created, the CAD program may export the radius values of the object at discrete intervals along its length into a spreadsheet application through data extraction, such as Microsoft Excel. The imported data results in a quantized data description in designated columns within the spreadsheet application. Once the data is imported into a spread sheet, the values held in the spread sheet may be used to create a sequence of lines and arcs that fit around the geometry of the scanned media to create a tangent continuous path for the printhead and lamp motion. These lines and arcs may be represented by their base equations based on curve positions obtained from the CAD file that includes the radii R_(i) 119 value plotted against the Y_(i) 114 position along the length of the print path at 1 mm intervals. As is known, the equation for a circle is (x−h)²+(y−k)=R² where the (h,k) are the coordinates of the center of the arc, and the equation of any line segment is y=mx+b, where m=the slope of the line and b is the y-axis intercept for the segment in question. Using these equations, values may be calculated and added into designated columns in the spreadsheet to represent a printhead path as well as a curing lamp path along position Y_(i) 114. For example, one column may solve for y using the actual position x with (h,k) and R from the CAD file. Once this calculated data is saved in the spreadsheet in designated columns, various tests and analyses may be done. Some tests and analyses may be completed in a semiautomated fashion to check for curve consistency and reliability as compared to the original object. For example, if both upper and lower curves of the object are retained, an object offset (i.e. eccentricity) during axial rotation may be calculated and recorded. Also, a curve may be drawn in the spreadsheet representing the object surface and a shadow curve from a resized image of the object dropped over the graphed object curve to compare the two to confirm that the smoothed curve of the imported image values are sufficiently similar to the unsmoothed curve of the actual object image to be usable as an accurate representation of the object shape during printing.

The spreadsheet approach above also allows an operator to consider the most advantageous “mode” of printing for the printer to produce the best possible image on the object surface. A graph may be created based on the spreadsheet values and displayed to show the amount of slope at a particular Y_(i) position, thereby showing the change in slope over distance. Using this information, the printed head width W may be adjusted to produce the best quality image along the print path (see discussion above on adjusting Win reference to FIGS. 10-11 ). The operator may also wish to compare the print head movement speed requirements to the printer's structural speed limitation to ensure that those limits are not exceeded for a particular prospective print job moved along the calculated print path.

Once the object geometric values are recorded in the spreadsheet per the above techniques, a specified target distance (i.e. offset 126) for all ink print heads and all curing lamps may be added from each R_(i) position, as the case may be, and a print head path 122 and a lamp path created (e.g. Z_(i) 118) and recorded in the spreadsheet. The values held in the spreadsheet may then be exported 252 as a comma delimited sequence (i.e. “CSV” or “.csv file”) in a computer file 253. The CSV file extension is then renamed 254 as a .lsg file and saved.

As mentioned above for FIGS. 10-11, and 12 , using the motion path values R_(i) and Y_(i) a CAM table (see FIGS. 14A-14B) may be calculated using a series of equations to direct movement of print head manipulator assemblies 71 and curing lamp assemblies 62. Hence, the .lsg file may be used to generate 258 a CAM table 259 based on the motion path values 257 saved in the CSV file 253, and save that file as an .lsc file 259 and save that file in a file directory in the computer storage system 148 appurtenant to system 142 (see FIG. 12 ). A suitable source code implementation in C # of this process to convert the CSV values in the .lsg file into a CAM table file (i.e. an .lsc file) may be found below under Table 2.0. As part of that process 258, a media offset or eccentricity value 261 may be incorporated into .lsc file.

TABLE 2.0 Applicant hereby incorporates by reference the computer program listing shown in an ASCII text file submitted herewith having the file name CREATE_CAM_TABLE.txt.

Once saved on PC system 142, the LSINC HMI passes the values held in the .lsc file to motion controller 191 in subsystem 170 via an Ethernet connection 262 to cause coordinated motion of the various head assembly and lamp assemblies 263. The LSINC HMI is configured to list various available geometries for media saved in a known directory on storage system 148 from which an operator may select a desired geometry in executing a print job, and from which the HMI may automatically re-select for continuous media print jobs, thereby also facilitating the repeating of print jobs for the same media type by avoiding additional operator involvement.

Referring to FIG. 17 , with references to elements in FIG. 12 also, process B 270 prepares and passes print image information to print engine 149. The process 270 requires that an image be created or obtained 271 and the image be converted 272 into a vector graphics format (VGF) to produce a vector graphics file 273. During the conversion process 272, a “knock-out” layer may be added 276 to eliminate over inking during printing, as discussed previously. A RIP is then used on the VGF file to create a raster image file 277 which typically ends in an .isi file extension 278. The .isi file is then saved into the same storage directory location as the .lsg file in system 142. The operator may select or input this directory location on storage system 148 into the LSINC HMI which also communicates this directory location to the INX HMI so that it may utilize the .isi file during printing. Once the directory location is set, the LSINC HMI presents a listing of all potential .isi files available for printing and the operator selects an .isi file for printing. After selection, the LSINC HMI communicates the .isi file to be printed to the INX HMI and also creates an .lsc extension file the includes various setup information and sends that information to the INX HMI. Each created .lsc file is tied to a unique .isi file. Upon initiation of a print job, the INX HMI uses the information in the .isi file and the LSINC HMI uses .lsc file to cause print engine 149 to send signals to each ink print head in coordinated ink expression with movement of ink head assemblies 279, along with the curing lamp assemblies 62 to cure the expressed ink on the surface of the media object immediately during each print job until the job ends 280.

Setup control 243 (see FIG. 15 ) causes the collection of a set of setup values 248 via process C 249. These values include a pressure offset value that is determined based on the ink weep cessation while the printer is at rest, which varies based on the machine altitude, temperature, and ink viscosity; an operated determined media object rotation speed via spindle servo 53; a print head offset value 126 from media surface 121; and a cure lamp intensity value. Those setup values are communicated to the print engine 149 and the motion control system 170 via each respective HMI. In the case of the ink pressure, the LSINC HMI uses the pressure offset value to adjust the ink pressure delivered to each print head responsive to the CAM table values held in the .lsc file via a .dll file provided by the INX printing system.

While I have shown my invention in one form, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that it is not so limited but is susceptible of various changes and modifications without departing from the spirit thereof. 

Having set forth the nature of the invention, what is claimed is:
 1. A method for creating a print control profile to cause a direct-to-shape printer to print on an axially symmetric object, comprising the steps of: a. creating a computer file holding geometric shape information representing the contoured surface of said axially symmetric object and including the step of capturing geometric shape information on said axially symmetric object by optically capturing an image of the entire outline of said object wherein the rotational axis of said object is contained within a focal plane holding said object during said optical capture step; b. applying a series of mathematical formulas operative to the motion of ink jet assemblies in said printer to said geometric shape computer file; c. wherein said step of applying operative formulas creates a CAM table usable by an electronics controller in said printer to control movement of said ink jet assemblies; d. creating a vector graphics computer file holding image information representative of an image to be printed by said direct-to-shape printer; e. using said vector graphics file, creating a raster image to be printed by said direct-to-shape printer; f. passing said CAM table to said electronics controller and said raster image to a print engine held by said direct-to-shape printer; and, g. responsive to said raster image and said CAM table, printing said image on said axially symmetric object.
 2. The method as recited in claim 1, further including the step of entering setup information into said printer to cause the coordinated motion of a curing lamp assembly to cure said printed image on said axially symmetric object.
 3. The method as recited in claim 2, wherein said step of creating a computer file holding geometric shape information representing the contoured surface of said axially symmetric object includes the step of recording radius values along the longitudinal axis of said object at specified intervals along said axis.
 4. The method as recited in claim 3, further including the step of adding a knock-out layer in said image to prevent over-inking said image onto said object during printing.
 5. The method as recited in claim 1, further including the step of capturing geometric shape information on said axially symmetric object by selecting the steps consisting of optically scanning said object in three dimensions or ultrasonically scanning said object in three dimensions.
 6. The method as recited in claim 5, further including the step of importing said captured geometric shape information into a computer aided design application to generate a smooth curve outline of the surface of said object and export said outline into a spreadsheet.
 7. The method as recited in claim 6, further including the step of importing geometric data into a spreadsheet application for validating said geometric information for compliance with said printer capabilities.
 8. The method as recited in claim 7, wherein said step of creating a computer file holding geometric shape information representing the contoured surface of said axially symmetric object includes the step of recording in said computer file axially concentric radius values along the longitudinal axis of said object at specified intervals along said axis.
 9. The method as recited in claim 1, further including the step of adding a knock-out layer in said image to prevent over inking said image onto said object during printing.
 10. The method as recited in claim 9, further including the step of responsive to said geometric information adjusting the print mode of said printer such that the printing swath of each ink print head in said printer is altered responsive to slope values of said surface shape of said object.
 11. The method as recited in claim 10, further including the step of importing said captured optical image into a computer aided design application and using said image to generate a smooth curve outline of the surface of said object and assigning numerical distance values to said outline in preparation for exporting said numerical values of said outline into a spreadsheet.
 12. A method for creating a print control profile to cause a direct-to-shape printer to print on an axially symmetric object, comprising the steps of: a. establishing a computer file holding geometric information representing the shape of said axially symmetric object and including the step of capturing geometric shape information on said axially symmetric object by optically capturing an image of the entire outline of said object wherein the rotational axis of said object is contained within a focal plane holding said object during said optical capture step; b. establishing a vector graphics computer file holding image information representative of an image to be printed on said axially symmetric object by said direct-to-shape printer; and, c. Passing said geometric shape information computer file and image computer file to said direct-to-shape printer to cause the printing of said image on said axially symmetric object.
 13. The method as recited in claim 12, further including the step of importing geometric data into a spreadsheet application for validating said geometric information for compliance with said printer capabilities.
 14. The method as recited in claim 13, further including the step of responsive to said geometric information adjusting the print mode of said printer such that the printing swath of each ink print head in said printer is altered responsive to slope values of the surface shape of said object.
 15. The method as recited in claim 14, further including the step of capturing geometric shape information on said axially symmetric object by selecting the steps consisting of optically scanning said object in three dimensions or ultrasonically scanning said object in three dimensions.
 16. The method as recited in claim 12, wherein said step of establishing a computer file holding geometric shape information representing the contoured surface of said axially symmetric object includes the step of recording in said computer file axially concentric radius values along the longitudinal axis of said object at specified intervals along said axis.
 17. In conjunction with a direct-to-shape printing system capable of printing images on the surface of a media object having an axially symmetrical surface and using an ink delivery system capable of drawing ink from a plurality of ink reservoirs and delivering coordinated ink expression through a plurality of inkjet printing heads to print said image on said media object surface, said direct-to-shape printing system including a computer system capable of receiving user control inputs, a method for creating a print control profile to cause said direct-to-shape printer system to print on said axially symmetric media object, comprising the steps of: a. causing the creation of a computer file holding geometric information generated from the shape of said axially symmetric object and including the step of capturing geometric shape information on said axially symmetric object by optically capturing an image of the entire outline of said object wherein the rotational axis of said object is contained within a focal plane holding said object during said optical capture step; b. causing the creation of a computer file holding image information representative of an image to be printed on said axially symmetric object by said direct-to-shape printer; c. saving said computer image file and said geometric information file on a computer storage system accessible by said computer system; and, d. responsive to operator inputs, causing the transference of said two saved computer files to printing subsystems in said direct-to-shape printing system to cause the printing of said image on said media object.
 18. The method as recited in claim 17, further including the step of entering setup information into said printer to cause the coordinated motion of a curing lamp assembly to cure said printed image on said axially symmetric media object.
 19. The method as recited in claim 18, further including the step of adding a knock-out layer in said image to prevent over inking of said image onto said object during printing. 